The Movie Cricket

Movie reviews by Sean P. Means.

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Grace (Jena Malone, center) finds herself in the middle of a bloody ritual in a Scottish convent, in the horror-thriller “Consecration.” (Photo courtesy of IFC Films / Shudder.)

Review: 'Consecration' is bathed in its bloody atmosphere, but its plot is purely deviled ham

February 09, 2023 by Sean P. Means

The Scottish horror thriller “Consecration” is swimming in atmosphere and, eventually, blood — which is as thick as the story behind it is thin.

The movie centers on Grace (Jena Malone), an ophthamologist living and working in London. She lives a rather ordinary life, which doesn’t explain why she has a premonition of an old nun confronting her in the middle of the street, pointing a revolver at her.

The movie puts a pin in that for awhile, as it shows Grace breaking down at the news that her brother, Michael, a priest in a remote Scottish convent, has died from suicide. Grace didn’t share her brother’s devotion to his religion — she declares herself an atheist early on — but she does believe, without proof, that Michael could not have killed himself.

In Scotland, Grace meets Inspector Harris (Thoren Ferguson), who’s investigating the deaths of Michael and another priest — though his jurisdiction is limited, because the convent belongs to The Vatican, which could assume control over the case at any time. That seems unlikely, based on the attitudes of The Vatican’s representative, Father Romero (Danny Huston), who declares his wish to bring the sometimes fanatical nuns closer to mainstream Catholicism. But those nuns — led by their Mother Superior (Janet Suzman) — are a force to be reckoned with.

As Grace digs into Michael’s belongings, including a journal written in code, she has questions about how her brother died — and what other secrets are hidden in the convent, which Father Romero is preparing to re-consecrate.

Director Christopher Smith, co-writing with Laurie Cook, provides ample brooding atmosphere in this faraway Scottish convent, and in the nightmarish visions Grace regularly sees. The movie looks good, which is why it’s even more disappointing that the story is only held together by the flimsiest of movie tropes — the one where the central figure doesn’t know or suspect the truth that everyone around her clearly knows. The unfair withholding of information, from Grace and from us, doesn’t give the movie a fair chance of working.

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‘Consecration’

★★

Opens Friday, February 10, in select theaters, and streaming later this year on Shudder. Rated R for bloody violent content and some language. Running time: 91 minutes.

February 09, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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Four friends – from left, Trish (Jane Fonda), Betty (Sally Field), Lou (Lily Tomlin) and Maura (Rita Moreno) — get their chance to have an adventure going to Super Bowl LI, in the comedy “80 For Brady.” (Photo by Scott Garfield, courtesy of Paramount Pictures.)

Review: '80 For Brady' casts four talented women and fumbles its comic opportunities with them.

February 02, 2023 by Sean P. Means

I try not to fall back on the late Gene Siskel’s litmus test — “Is this film more interesting than a documentary of the same actors having lunch?” — but with the disappointing “80 For Brady,” I can’t help but think that the interviews stars Sally Field, Jane Fonda, Rita Moreno and Lily Tomlin have given on the publicity tour are more engaging than the movie they’re promoting.

In this “based on a true story” comedy, the actors play four longtime friends who in 2017 gather every Sunday in the fall to watch their favorite team, the New England Patriots — and, specifically, their favorite player, quarterback Tom Brady. 

Louella, or Lou (Tomlin), is the ringleader, at whose home they gather. Trish (Fonda) is the flirt, still rocking it in her 80s (with the help of several wigs) — and she writes erotic fan fiction based on Patriots star Rob Gronkowski. (This is a real thing, folks.) Maura (Moreno) is a widow, and lives in her husband’s nursing home for the company, not because she needs care. And Betty (Field) is a retired MIT professor who got into football because of the stats.

We’re told that Lou is a cancer survivor, and that Brady was her inspiration during the dark days of chemo — well, Brady and her friends, who have made the weekly game-watching a tradition. Lou decides, on the spur of the moment, that the foursome needs a road trip, and when a Boston sports-talk show is giving away four tickets to Super Bowl LI in Houston, in which the Patriots are playing the Atlanta Falcons, Lou enters with her tale of Brady-inspired recovery. Next thing you know, Lou is calling up the others, with news that they’re going to Houston.

Much of the movie is spent on the women’s wacky adventures in the pre-game revelry, from Betty entering a hot-wing contest (hosted by Guy Fieri) to Trish getting romanced by a retired football star (Harry Hamlin). Then there’s the game itself, which offers even more adventures.

What it doesn’t offer is anything genuinely funny or entertaining. The script — by Emily Halpern and Sarah Haskins (who worked together on “Booksmart”) — plays out as a “Golden Girls” episode artificially stuffed with celebrity cameos (like Fieri) and advertising for the National Football League, the Patriots, and Brady himself. (Brady is one of the movie’s executive producers, and I hope he has a better career plan than moviemaking now that he’s retired again.) Director Kyle Marvin seems to be floundering, trying to cram it all in and still create something engaging.

The thing is, I love all four of these stars — I don’t care to know anyone who doesn’t — and it’s kind of sad to see them stuck in this by-the-numbers silliness. There are moments in “80 for Brady” where they stop the forced craziness of the plot and just talk to each other like real people. Too bad there aren’t more of those moments, but maybe somebody will take them out for lunch.

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’80 for Brady’

★1/2

Opening Friday, February 3, in theaters everywhere. Rated PG-13 for brief strong language, some drug content and some suggestive references. Running time: 98 minutes.

February 02, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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Guslagie Malanda plays Laurence Coly, a woman on trial accused of killing her 15-month-old child, in director Alice Diop’s drama “Saint Omer.” (Photo courtesy of Super / Neon.)

Review: 'Saint Omer' is a dense courtroom drama about mothers and daughters, but the emotional payoff is immense.

February 02, 2023 by Sean P. Means

Director Alice Diop demands a lot from the audience in her courtroom drama “Saint Omer” — and for those willing to meet the movie head-on, there is an emotional payoff.

Rama (Kayije Kagame) is a literature professor and novelist, and her latest project is hitting close to home. She travels to Saint-Omer, in the far northern corner of France, which is where she grew up. She’s there to witness the trial of Laurence Coly (Guslagie Malanda), a Senegalese immigrant on trial for killing her 15-month-old baby by leaving her on the shore and letting the waves drown her.

Rama’s idea is to use Laurence’s trial as the basis for a modern-day take on “Medea,” the ancient Greek tragedy of a woman who killed her children. But as the court testimony goes on, Rama notices the parallels between Laurence’s story and her own. Both are from Senegal, both are in relationships with Caucasian Frenchmen, and Rama is four months’ pregnant and having doubts about what kind of mother she will be.

Diop, writing with frequent collaborator Amrita David (who also edited the film), takes the audience on an uncomfortable trip into the mind of Black immigrants living in a predominantly white country — a life, no matter one’s class status, that involves constantly being questioned about your place. Diop sets up a fascinating contrast between Rama and Laurence, two women who aren’t as far apart as Rama initially believes.

The story plays out mostly in courtroom scenes, and I have to admit my unfamiliarity with the way French court testimony works had me confused for part of my viewing. (One moment, when Laurence’s white attorney, played by Aurélia Petit, gives the summation, reminded me too much of Matthew McConaughey’s character in “A Time to Kill.”)

Watching the two lead performances, by Kagame and Malanda, as two women with common situations but different outcomes, makes for compelling drama — and gives “Saint Omer” the tension Diop is seeking to create. 

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‘Saint Omer’

★★★

Opening Friday, February 3, at the Broadway Centre Cinemas (Salt Lake City). Rated PG-13 for some thematic elements and brief strong language. Running time: 124 minutes; in French with subtitles.

February 02, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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Spencer (Kit Harington, left) and Jo (Noémie Merlant) hold their new baby girl, Ruby, in the psychological thriller “Baby Ruby,” written and directed by playwright Bess Wohl. (Photo courtesy of Magnet Releasing.)

Review: 'Baby Ruby' is an unsettling thriller about new motherhood, bolstered by French star Noémie Merlant's passionate performance.

February 02, 2023 by Sean P. Means

The psychological thriller “Baby Ruby” does some fascinating things with a familiar idea: That one of the most terrifying things a woman can face is new motherhood.

Joséphine, played by French actor Noémie Merlant (“Portrait of a Lady on Fire”), has built a small business out of her personal brand as a social-media influencer and blogger — sharing her picture-perfect life with the world. She and her husband, Spencer (Kit Harington), an artisanal butcher, have built a beautiful home upstate, and are getting ready to greet their baby daughter, Ruby.

After Ruby’s birth — a rather blood-filled experience — Jo finds caring for her new baby a tougher battle than she thought. Jo is up at all hours, either trying to get Ruby to stop crying or strapping on the breast pumps to express milk for later. Sleep deprivation sets in, and Jo begins to think something’s horribly wrong with her baby.

Seeing the other moms in her town — in particular Shelly (Meredith Hagner) — all smiling and serene with their babies, just sets Jo spiraling even further. She starts to think she can’t trust her pediatrician (Reed Birney), her mother-in-law (Jayne Atkinson) or even Spencer.

Playwright Bess Wohl (whose play “Grand Horizons” was nominated for two Tonys in 2020) makes a sure-footed directing debut, squeezing Jo’s postpartum fears into the shape of a horror thriller. Her smartest move in “Baby Ruby,” though, was casting Merlant, who captures Jo’s journey from confident influencer to terrified new mom with convincing levels of panic and horror. 

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‘Baby Ruby’

★★★

Opening Friday, February 3, in theaters. Not rated, but probably R for bloody violence, some nudity and sexual content, and language. Running time: 92 minutes.

February 02, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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Maurice the cat (voiced by Hugh Laurie) and his human collaborator Keith (voiced by Himesh Patel) try to run a scam on a small town in the fairytale sendup “The Amazing Maurice,” directed by Toby Genkel and Florian Westermann. (Photo courtesy of Viva Kids.)

Review: 'The Amazing Maurice,' adapting Terry Pratchett's children's story, is a funny attempt at a fractured fairytale

February 02, 2023 by Sean P. Means

Loaded with clever animation and droll British wit, the animated “The Amazing Maurice” is a charming sendup of the fairytale genre that revels in the act of storytelling itself.

Adapted from the late Terry Pratchett’s “The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents,” part of Pratchett’s expansive “Discworld” series, the story starts with a talking cat, Maurice (voiced by Hugh Laurie). 

Maurice works a clever scam alongside a human, Keith (voiced by Himesh Patel), and a group of talking rats — where the rats “infest” a town, the cat urges the townsfolk to hire a piper, Keith, who lures the rats away while Maurice collects the money. Then they go to the next town and do the whole thing again.

The scam works until they reach the market town of Bad Blintz, which already has its problems: There are no rats visible, but something is stealing all the food. The town rat catchers seem to be doing too good a job, under the command of the mysterious Boss Man (voiced by David Thewlis), who has a dark secret up his sleeves.

It also doesn’t help that Maurice’s cover is blown when he’s found out by Malicia (voiced by Emilia Clarke), the daughter of the mayor (voiced by Hugh Bonneville). Malicia loves telling stories so much that she’s telling this one — she’s the narrator, and explains to the younger viewers such concepts as “framing device” and “backstory.” 

The plot boils down to whether the rats can solve the mystery and thwart Boss Man’s nefarious, and whether Maurice can overcome his cat instincts — to be selfish and run away from danger — to help his rat friends find their sanctuary, described by the wise rat called Dangerous Beans (voiced by David Tennant) as a place where animals and humans co-exist peacefully, without poisons or traps.

Directors Toby Genkel and Florian Westermann keep the pace lively, and mount some clever action set pieces that are exciting without being too violent. The screenplay, by “Shrek” and “Pirates of the Caribbean” co-writer Terry Rossio, captures a lot of Pratchett’s dry humor as the story deconstructs its tropes and rebuilds them in interesting ways — and gives “The Amazing Maurice” more bite than the average kids’ movie.

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‘The Amazing Maurice’

★★★

Opens Friday, February 3, in theaters. Rated PG for action/peril and some rude material. Running time: 92 minutes.

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This review originally appeared on this site on January 29, 2023, when the movie appeared at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival.

February 02, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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An image from the poster for director M. Night Shyamalan’s “Knock at the Cabin,” featuring (from left) Nikki Amuri-Bird, Dave Bautista, Abby Quinn and Rupert Grint. (Image courtesy of Universal Pictures.)

Review: 'Knock at the Cabin' is a solid thriller from M. Night Shyamalan, but Dave Bautista is the reason to watch

February 01, 2023 by Sean P. Means

As he has done so often in his career, director M. Night Shyamalan deploys his abundant skills as a film craftsman to uncertain ends in “Knock at the Cabin” — a tough-minded horror thriller that keeps the audience clenched in anticipation all the way to a finale that will have as many interpretations as it has viewers.

(I’ll try to keep the synopsis out of spoiler territory — other than what Universal has already divulged in the movie’s trailer. But If you want to go in cold, read this after you’ve seen it and we can compare experiences.)

The story begins with Wen (Kristen Cui), almost 8 years old, out in the woods catching grasshoppers in a jar and diligently cataloging them in her notebook. Then she notices a man some distance away in the woods — and, before long, the man is walking right up to talk to her.

The man, played by Dave Bautista, is large and, at first, intimidating. He talks in a quiet, reassuring voice. Wen is wary, telling the man that she’s not supposed to talk to strangers — and the man agrees that is a wise policy. He tells Wen that “I’m here to be your friend,” and introduces himself as Leonard. Then he says his heart is broken, “because of what I have to do today.”

This scares Wen, as it should, and she runs back to the rental cabin she’s sharing with her two dads, Eric (Jonathan Groff) and Andrew (Ben Aldridge). They lock the doors and windows, and wait until Leonard pounds on the front door.

Leonard’s not alone. He has three people with them, all carrying makeshift weapons — clubs with large blades attached, mostly. They fight their way into the house, and in the short battle Eric is knocked out and given a concussion. Both dads are tied to chairs, which is when Leonard and the others explain themselves.

Leonard insists that he and the others are ordinary folks — Leonard’s a schoolteacher from Chicago; Sabrina (Nikki Amuka-Bird) identifies herself as a post-op nurse from California; Adriana (Abby Quinn) says she works as a line cook in a Mexican restaurant in Washington, D.C.; and Redmond (Rupert Grint) works for a utility in Boston. 

The four say they all have seen visions of the apocalypse, and are convinced that the only way to prevent the end of the world is for Eric, Andrew and Wen to choose for one of them to be sacrificed, killed by someone in their family. The longer they wait to make that choice, Leonard tells them, more people on Earth will die.

The script — written by Shyamalan and the rookie writing team of Steve Desmond and Michael Sherman, adapting Paul Tremblay’s novel “The Cabin at the End of the World” — moves to a fairly familiar rhythm, as the four invaders plead with the two dads, who don’t believe their talk of apocalypse. There also are some well-placed flashbacks that establish the dads’ relationship and how they adopted Wen as a baby from China to become this loving family.

The remarkable moments in the film belong to Bautista, who’s become more of a true actor than one would expect from a 6-foot-4 ex-wrestler. Bautista has previously shown he’s got action and comic chops, in his role as Drax in Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” movies. Here, though, he brings a soulfulness and a quiet intensity to the pre-apocalyptic proceedings.

The question mark, as with most Shyamalan movies, is how he sticks the landing. In his masterpieces, “The Sixth Sense” and “Unbreakable,” the ending is where all the pieces fall perfectly into place, and you see the clockwork precision of his design. More recently, though, in movies like “Split,” “Glass” and “Old,” the ending is where everything goes haywire, and the springs of the clockwork fly out of the mechanism.

With the ending to “Knock at the Cabin,” the ending just  … happens. There’s no brilliant summation, and no disaster. It ends like a solid thriller is supposed to end, as if Shyamalan’s biggest twist is to deliver a movie that is well-constructed and goes pretty much where you expect it to go.

——

‘Knock at the Cabin’

★★★

Opens Friday, February 3, in theaters everywhere. Rated R for violence and language. Running time: 100 minutes.

February 01, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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Bill Nighy plays a British civil servant who reacts to some life-altering news, in director Oliver Hermanus’ drama “Living.” (Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.)

Review: 'Living' is quietly emotional, and a Oscar-nominated showcase for Bill Nighy

January 26, 2023 by Sean P. Means

Like the main character that has given Bill Nighy his long-deserved Academy Award nomination, director Oliver Hermanus’ “Living” is elegant and emotionally restrained — but with a massive heart beating underneath that placid surface.

Nighy plays Rodney Williams, a civil servant who has worked for decades in the public works department in London. The movie starts somewhere around 1950, after World War II, and Williams — having received a diagnosis that he has a terminal cancer — is realizing that his life of filing away papers and wrapping proposals in red tape isn’t fulfilling.

First, he decides to flee London, his work, and his son Michael (Barney Fishwick) and his daughter-in-law Fiona (Patsy Ferran), for the seaside, with half of his life’s savings with him. In a coastal town, he is befriended by a garrulous playwright (Tom Burke), who gives him a tour of the arcades and burlesques of the town. That turns out to be unsatisfying, too.

Back in London, he continues to play hooky from work, and spends a pleasant afternoon with a young woman, Miss Harris (Aimee Lee Wood), who recently left Williams’ office for another job. She ultimately cajoles him to return to the public works department — but he’s a changed man, his colleagues notice, suddenly eager to push forward projects he used to bury.

If this story sounds familiar, then you’re a fan of classic arthouse movies. It’s a remake of Akira Kurosawa’s 1952 drama “Ikiru,” adapted with precisely controlled emotions by novelist Kazoo Ishiguro (“The Remains of the Day”), who also got an Academy Award nomination this week.

Hermanus and Ishiguro establish with a few light brushstrokes the stifling conformity in which Williams has lived much of his life — riding the same train every morning that his junior staffers do, sitting at the same desks and forming what Miss Harris calls “skyscrapers” of bureaucratic files. It’s all painstakingly realized, and the perfect cage from which Williams so desperately wants to escape.

Nighy does give a career-high performance here, going from quiet acceptance to melancholy to a resolve to make something of his life, no matter how short that life will be. Nighy makes “Living” a story that will move the viewer to tears — and to examining what one is doing with their life.

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‘Living’

★★★1/2

Opens Friday, January 27, in select theaters. Rated PG-13 for some suggestive material and smoking. Running time: 102 minutes.

January 26, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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June (Storm Reid) works her phone and her computer skills when she discovers her mother has gone missing whine vacationing in Colombia, in the thriller “Missing.” (Photo courtesy of Screen Gems / Sony.)

Review: 'Missing' is a tight cyber thriller, where some big ideas play out on small screens

January 19, 2023 by Sean P. Means

The cyber thriller “Missing” works — as its predecessor, “Searching,” did — because it keeps all its action on a computer screen, and finds an endless supply of tricks to make that visual premise work on our nerves for nearly two hours.

At 17, June (Storm Reid) barely lifts ahead above her laptop to acknowledge her mom, Grace (Nia Long), who’s getting ready to leave on a week’s vacation in Colombia with her new boyfriend, Kevin (Ken Leung). June doesn’t think she has to look up, because everything she needs is on her screen, or on her phone. She’s got video to remember her late father (Tim Griffin), FaceTime to keep in touch with Grace’s longtime friend Heather (Amy Landecker), chat platforms to converse with her friends, and Google to research ways to get booze for a party she and her friends are going to throw as soon as Grace’s plane is airborne.

When June goes to LAX a week later to pick up her mother, Mom is a no-show. June learns, from the FBI’s man at the Bogota embassy, Agent Park (Daniel Henney) that Grace and Kevin’s luggage is still at their hotel in Cartagena, but no one knows what happens to them.

June is worried, but not without resources. She hacks into Kevin’s Google account to dig up information from his emails. Remotely, she hires Javi (Joaquim de Almeida), a day laborer in Cartagena, to go to Grace’s hotel to follow her trail. And she monitors surveillance cameras at Cartagena landmarks, in hopes her mom suddenly shows up.

June’s computer savvy uncovers some bombshells of information, which the story drops at steady intervals, creating some white-knuckle tension and some hairpin turns in the narrative.

Directors Nick Johnson and Will Merrick — who were editors on “Searching” — and co-screenwriter Sev Ohanian (who also co-wrote “Searching”) — create a cleverly rendered thriller, loaded with red herrings, switchback narratives, and some effective plot twists that keep June, and the audience, on their toes.

“Missing,” like “Searching” was before it, is an eye-opening commentary about the ubiquity of surveillance cameras, smartphones and easily hackable data — and a reminder that one’s personal data doesn’t necessarily remain personal for long. Wrapping that message up in a slick, fast-paced thriller just makes the message go down faster.

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‘Missing’

★★★

Opens Friday, January 20, in theaters everywhere. Rated PG-13 for some strong violence, language, teen drinking, and thematic material. Running time: 111 minutes.

January 19, 2023 /Sean P. Means
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